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Arizona Meteor CraterFormed when a piece of an Asteroid slammed into the earth at some 26,000 miles per hour.photo-id: AZG-028 request pricing

Arizona Meteor CraterForming a crater 2.4 miles in circumference and more than 500 feet deep, its estimated the collison released the explosive force of some 20 million tons of TNT.photo-id: AZG-034 request pricing

Arizona Meteor CraterBilled as the most well known best preserved meteorite crater on earth.photo-id: AZG-027 request pricing

Arizona Meteor CraterForming a crater 2.4 miles in circumference and more than 500 feet deep, its estimated the collison released the explosive force of some 20 million tons of TNT.photo-id: AZG-030 request pricing

Arizona Meteor CraterIt would have been a bad day for the Woolly Mammoths that inhabited what was grasslands at the time.photo-id: AZG-032 request pricing

Arizona Meteor CraterBilled as the most well known best preserved meteorite crater on earth.photo-id: AZG-033 request pricing

Arizona Meteor CraterIt would have been a bad day for the Woolly Mammoths that inhabited what was grasslands at the time.photo-id: AZG-035 request pricing

Arizona Meteor CraterForming a crater 2.4 miles in circumference and more than 500 feet deep, its estimated the collison released the explosive force of some 20 million tons of TNT.photo-id: AZG-036 request pricing

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